Plex Mobile

Plex made remote streaming a paid feature in April 2025, raised the lifetime Plex Pass from $119.99 to $249.99, and is bumping the Remote Watch Pass from $1.99 to $2.99 a month on June 1, 2026. If you bought a Synology box or are about to repurpose an old PC into a NAS, you no longer get free remote access to your own movies and TV shows. The XDA write-up on free NAS distros was the latest reminder that self-hosted media has been quietly moving away from the Plex ecosystem, and the migration is now as simple as pointing a new server at the same files. We tested seven Plex alternatives that work on Android and have actively maintained clients in 2026.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planStarting price/moStandout feature
JellyfinFOSS Plex replacement, no paywallsYes (full)$0Hardware transcoding, free forever
FindroidPolished Android client for a Jellyfin serverYes$0Native Material 3 UI for Jellyfin
EmbyPaid mid-tier between Plex and JellyfinYes (limited)$4.99 (Premiere)$119.99 lifetime, half of Plex
KodiPower users who want add-ons and skinsYes (full)$0Plays anything, runs anywhere
StremioCatalog-style streaming via add-onsYes$0One library across personal media and live TV
VLC for AndroidLightweight playback from SMB/UPnP sharesYes$0No server required, plays anything
DS VideoSynology owners who want to stay on the boxYes (with NAS)$0Tightest integration with DSM 7

Why people leave Plex in 2026

Which app should you pick?

Stay on Plex if you already own a lifetime Plex Pass from before April 2025, your household relies on Plex Discover, or you genuinely use Plexamp for music and want the curated radio that nothing else matches.


1. Jellyfin, best overall Plex alternative

Jellyfin

Jellyfin is the open-source media server that forked from Emby in 2018 and has steadily closed the gap with Plex on every measure that matters. The 10.11 release migrated to Entity Framework Core, added FFmpeg 7.1 with AV1 hardware encode and decode on Intel Arc and QSV, improved HDR tone mapping, and shipped a long-overdue Xbox client. None of that costs anything: hardware transcoding, live TV, multi-user profiles, and remote access are all free.

For Plex vs Jellyfin on Android, the official Jellyfin Mobile app is competent but minimal, which is why most users pair it with a third-party client like Findroid or use a browser. The server itself has no telemetry, no mandatory account, and no cloud dependency. You connect directly to your server’s IP or domain.

Where it falls short: setup takes longer than Plex’s wizard. First-time users need to install the server, configure ports or a reverse proxy for remote access, and match libraries by hand if metadata fails. The official mobile app also still trails Plex’s polish, which is the single most cited reason people stay on Plex despite the price hikes.

Pricing:

Migrating from Plex: point Jellyfin at the same media directories and it will rescan and match metadata. Watch history transfer requires a community script (JellyPlex Watched is the most maintained option). Playlists move via PlexAPI export. Allow 30 to 60 minutes for a 500-movie library, including manual fixes on the 5% Jellyfin does not match automatically.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayF-Droid

Bottom line: the default replacement for Plex in 2026 if cost, privacy, or self-hosting principle matters at all.


2. Findroid, best Android-native client for Jellyfin

Findroid

Findroid is the third-party Android client that solves Plex vs Jellyfin’s biggest mobile gap. The official Jellyfin Mobile app wraps the web UI in a WebView, which works but feels exactly like a wrapped web UI. Findroid is a native Material 3 app written in Kotlin, with offline downloads, multiple server profiles, fast-resume, picture-in-picture, and fixes for the subtitle handling that the official client still ships with.

For users who tried Jellyfin once and bounced because the mobile app felt slow, Findroid is the second look. Server pairing is a barcode or address scan, and the experience after that is closer to Plex’s mobile app than to the Jellyfin web view. Active development with monthly releases and a small but engaged contributor base.

Where it falls short: Findroid only does playback, it does not configure or administer the server. Library management still happens in the web UI or in JellyWatch. The app is also Android-only by design, so iOS users on Jellyfin need to look at Swiftfin instead.

Pricing:

Migrating from Plex: Findroid does not migrate anything itself, it is a client. Set up Jellyfin first (see entry 1), then point Findroid at the server.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayF-Droid

Bottom line: the right pairing for Jellyfin on Android, and the easiest way to make the move from Plex’s mobile app feel like a lateral step rather than a downgrade.


3. Emby, best paid middle ground between Plex and Jellyfin

Emby for Android

Emby is the project Jellyfin forked from in 2018, and it has continued as a freemium product with a smaller team and a tighter focus. The free tier covers library management, basic streaming, and many client platforms. Emby Premiere unlocks hardware transcoding, mobile and offline sync, DVR, Cinema Mode, parental controls, and the official Android app’s full playback features. Compared to Plex, Premiere is roughly half the price for the lifetime tier and matches it on the practical features.

The Android app is the most polished non-Plex client we tested. UI feels closer to Plex than Jellyfin’s web wrapper does, library navigation is fast, and Chromecast works reliably. Emby’s plugin catalog is also more extensive than Plex’s, with active third-party metadata agents and integrations that the Plex team has been quietly deprecating.

Where it falls short: Emby is partially closed-source after the 2018 split, which is the main reason ideologically motivated self-hosters chose Jellyfin instead. It is also a paid product for full mobile playback, so the free tier is more of a trial than a long-term option. Some platform clients (notably the Xbox app) lag months behind Plex’s release cadence.

Pricing:

Migrating from Plex: point Emby’s library at the same media folders and let the metadata refresh run. Watch history is harder to move, the community plugin “Emby Migration Tools” handles most of it but expects manual cleanup on TV episodes that Plex tagged with a different scheme.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: the practical pick for households who want Plex polish without the Plex Pass, and who can stomach a partially closed-source server in exchange for better mobile apps than Jellyfin currently ships.


4. Kodi, best for power users and unusual media libraries

Kodi

Kodi has been the benchmark for open-source media playback for nearly two decades, and the 21 “Omega” release in 2024 modernised the audio stack, added AV1 hardware decoding, and rewrote the Android touch UI for handhelds. Where Plex and Jellyfin assume Movies/TV/Music libraries, Kodi handles audiobooks, comics, anime with hardsubs, ROM thumbnails, and arbitrary network sources without needing a separate server. The skin system also lets you remake the UI to match anything from a 90s media center to a console-like dashboard.

For Plex users with a complicated library (anime fansubs with weird filename patterns, mixed-quality TV rips, audiobooks that need chapter navigation), Kodi is often the only option that handles every case without a workaround. Add-on repositories cover legitimate sources like the ones in Stremio’s add-on directory, Tubi, IPTV via M3U, and direct NAS playback over SMB or NFS without transcoding.

Where it falls short: Kodi has no centralised metadata service, so library management is more hands-on than on Plex. The third-party add-on ecosystem has also been thinning out: long-running add-ons like Exodus and Covenant are abandoned, and many new “builds” are repackaged forks rather than real maintenance. The all-in-one design also means Kodi is the player and the server, which is fine on a single device and awkward across many.

Pricing:

Migrating from Plex: Kodi reads the same media folders Plex does. Add the source, let the scraper run, and the library populates. There is no automatic watch-history transfer, but the Kodi forum maintains scripts that read Plex’s database and write to Kodi’s MyVideos.db.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: the right pick for users who care about format support and customisation more than about a polished poster wall, especially on Android TV where Kodi’s remote-friendly UI shines.


5. Stremio, best for catalog-style streaming with add-ons

Stremio

Stremio approaches the problem from a different angle than Plex. Instead of a server you host, Stremio is a video frontend with an add-on system that pulls movies, TV, live channels, and personal media into one library. Official add-ons cover YouTube, Twitch, and Vimeo. Community add-ons cover IPTV, Real-Debrid, Trakt sync, and personal media via local file paths. Once configured, your add-ons follow your account across desktop, Android, Android TV, and LG TV.

The 1.9.x branch in 2026 improved 4K playback stability and the auto-sync of add-ons across devices: install on Android, log in on the TV, the catalog is already there. For users who used Plex for the discover surface and the live TV channels, Stremio is the closest equivalent that does not paywall remote streaming.

Where it falls short: Stremio’s content quality lives or dies by add-ons. Reviews on the Play Store and Trustpilot consistently note that updates can break stable add-on configurations and that the in-house transcoder is less robust than Plex’s. There is also no native offline download for personal media, which is a real gap if you commute on the underground.

Pricing:

Migrating from Plex: add your media folder as a Local Files source. Stremio will surface it alongside other catalogues. There is no watch-history transfer; the Trakt.tv add-on can sync going forward.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: the right pick if Plex’s mix of personal library, live TV, and discovery was the appeal, and you do not mind the catalog quality riding on community add-ons.


6. VLC for Android, best lightweight network playback

VLC for Android

VLC for Android is the answer when “Plex alternative” really means “I just want to play files from the NAS without running a server.” VideoLAN’s Android app browses SMB, FTP, NFS, UPnP, and direct network URLs, and plays whatever you point it at without transcoding. The 4.0 release added a redesigned audio player, gapless playback, and a faster network browsing flow that lists all your discovered shares on launch.

For households who already had a Plex server purely as a fancy file browser, VLC takes that job at zero cost and zero setup. It is also the natural pairing with a barebones NAS distro (TrueNAS, OpenMediaVault, the unRAID-style setups that have replaced Synology in some homelabs) where you do not want a media-server layer on top.

Where it falls short: VLC has no library, no metadata, no posters, no resume tracking across devices, and no remote relay. It is a player, not a server. For multi-user households or anyone who liked the Netflix-style poster wall, VLC alone will feel undercooked.

Pricing:

Migrating from Plex: there is nothing to migrate, VLC reads files directly. Add an SMB or NFS source to the Browsing tab, point at the same network share Plex was scanning, and start playback.

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp StoreF-Droid

Bottom line: the obvious pick when you only kept Plex around to play files from the NAS, and the cleanest companion to a stripped-down NAS distro that does not bundle a media server.


7. DS Video, best for Synology owners staying on the box

DS Video

DS Video is Synology’s own media app for DSM, paired with the Video Station and Media Server packages on the NAS. For owners who already paid for a Synology box and want to keep using DSM’s first-party tools instead of installing Plex on top, DS Video does the same poster-wall and remote-streaming job. Library scanning, metadata, hardware transcoding (on Plus and XS models with the right CPU), offline downloads, and Chromecast all work out of the box, and remote access piggybacks on Synology QuickConnect at no extra cost.

For Plex users who set up a Synology specifically to host Plex and now find themselves paying both for the NAS and for Plex Pass, DS Video plus the bundled DS File and DS Audio apps is a way to consolidate. Synology’s tooling is also tightly integrated with DSM 7’s user accounts, so household sharing reuses the same permissions you set elsewhere on the NAS.

Where it falls short: DS Video is locked to Synology hardware, which is the entire reason XDA’s NAS distro article exists. The transcoding pipeline also caps at the NAS CPU’s capability, and Synology’s hardware lineup has been criticised for thin upgrades since 2024. The mobile UI is functional rather than polished, with some dialogs that look unchanged since DSM 6.

Pricing:

Migrating from Plex: install Video Station on the NAS, point it at the same shared folders Plex was using, and let it rescan. Watch history does not transfer from Plex automatically. If you want a Plex Pass-style automatic library cleanup, Synology’s Active Backup for Business handles ZFS-style snapshotting to roll back accidental deletions.

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: the right pick if you bought a Synology and the entire reason you are leaving Plex is to stop juggling two media-server stacks on the same hardware.

FAQ

Is Jellyfin really a free Plex alternative?

Yes. Jellyfin is a 2018 fork of Emby maintained by a nonprofit and is licensed GPLv2. There are no paid features, no required accounts, and no telemetry. Hardware transcoding, live TV, mobile sync, and remote access are all included at $0, against Plex’s $69.99/year or $249.99 lifetime for the same feature set.

Can I move my Plex library to Jellyfin without re-encoding?

Yes. Both servers read the same media files on disk. Point Jellyfin at your existing Movies and TV Shows folders and it will rescan, fetch metadata, and present the same library. You will not re-encode anything. Watch history takes one extra step via a community migration script.

What is the cheapest Plex alternative?

Jellyfin and VLC for Android, both at $0 with no premium tier. Jellyfin replaces the full Plex stack including remote access. VLC replaces only the file-playback part and works directly against an SMB or NFS share, no server needed.

Is Plex still worth it in 2026?

For households with a lifetime Plex Pass purchased before April 2025 and a heavy Plexamp music workflow, yes. For everyone else, the math has shifted. The new lifetime pass at $249.99 plus the cloud-account requirement makes Plex hard to justify when Jellyfin or Emby cover the same ground at $0 to $119.

Do these apps work on Android TV?

All seven do. Jellyfin and Findroid both publish Android TV builds, Kodi has the longest history on the platform, Emby ships a TV-focused client, Stremio has an official Android TV app, VLC handles the standard remote workflow, and DS Video is part of Synology’s Android TV bundle. Plex’s Android TV client is also still excellent, just no longer free remotely.

What replaces Plexamp for music?

The closest match for Jellyfin is Finamp on iOS and Symfonium on Android, both of which expose Jellyfin’s music library with curated playlists and offline downloads. Neither is a direct one-for-one with Plexamp’s mood-based radio, but combined with Navidrome as a Subsonic-compatible server, they cover the everyday listening case.